Florida Licensing Requirements
Use this guide for Florida Life and Health licensing basics, CE expectations, and annuity training rules.
Use these state guides to understand licensing paths, continuing education basics, and the official links that matter most before you enroll in a course.
Each guide is built to help you understand the licensing or renewal path for that state, find the right official links, and get to the next step faster.
Use this guide for Florida Life and Health licensing basics, CE expectations, and annuity training rules.
Built around Georgiaβs licensing path, CE timeline, self-study limits, and annuity best-interest rules.
Focused on the Texas general lines Life, Accident, Health and HMO track, CE compliance, and annuity certification.
These pages are meant to help you get to the right state requirement quickly, without digging through multiple tabs to find the basics.
Explains the Georgia Life / Accident and Sickness path, exam flow, affidavit, fingerprints, and application steps.
Covers Georgiaβs birth-month CE deadline, 24-hour and 20-hour tracks, and annuity best-interest training.
Built around the Texas general lines LAH track, exam-before-application rule, fingerprints, and temporary license option.
Explains Texas CE totals, classroom-equivalent rules, deficiency fines, and annuity best-interest certification.
A practical Florida-first guide for licensing, CE, and recurring update questions.
Marshmallow CE will keep adding state-by-state guides as the course library and approvals expand.
Insurance licensing and CE rules vary by state, so separate guides make it easier to get the right answer without mixing Florida, Georgia, and Texas details together.
Yes. Marshmallow CE plans to add more state-specific guides over time, but the current focus is making the available states clear and useful first.
No. These are research pages meant to help you understand requirements. Teachable is still the place for enrollment, login, and course delivery.
Yes. Licensing and CE rules can change, so each guide points back to the official regulator pages for final confirmation.
Once you have the state basics sorted out, the next step should be specific: Florida Law & Ethics or Georgia Ethics, not a generic catalog hunt.